So the trees grew, and outgrew my technology. Then I picked up an old orchard sprayer from my local machinery dealer, and gravitated to band spraying (switching a tractor-mounted sprayer off between trees requires more dexterity, accuracy, and even controls, than I had, and doesn’t do the machinery much good). Though by this time the trees were getting to the point where a continuously clear band was only going to be good for expanding root growth, so I didn’t begrudge them that extra bit of herbicide. They grew wonderfully. So the lesson in this is that herbicides can be very useful and, if the sums were done, probably far more economical (let alone effective) than mulching. And in case you believe ‘herbicide’ and ‘conservation’ shouldn’t be mentioned in the same breath, or the same sentence, just try g**gling them together, e.g. http://www.appliedeco.org/conservation-research/prairie-restoration-research, or http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol7/iss1/art6/
The second is from our farm, and dates from 2004. Two years before, these trees were very much like the trees in the foreground of the previous photo. Glyphosate sprayed at the recommended level of active ingredient per hectare gave the grass control you can see here. Some of these trees nutted in 2004, which does not speak to an immediate herbicide effect but rather that the previous spot-spraying was itself effective. Now, I only spray seedling trees under establishment (mainly the selection blocks). My current weapon of choice (not used in this photo) is an ATV-mounted Enviromist Sprayer, with a 60cm spraydome. I can now do hectares of plantation per hour.
Let me mention some of the other consequences of vegetation, mainly grass, control with herbicide. As I generally spray only once, in the spring, there has been an interesting proliferation of broad-leaved species, with an accompanying increase in insect and bird diversity. Note that I say broad-leaved ‘species’, rather than ‘weeds’. The definition of a weed is ‘any plant growing where you do not want it to grow’. While I was quite surprised by the influx of milkweed, and of some other species, it is only ragweed that I truly dislike. Ragweed, apart from its noxious asthmatic-inducing pollen, is a plant with no redeeming features, and can be as oppressive to young black walnut as grass can be. So a second application may be called for. The remaining vegetational diversity I value, as it co-exists with the trees without direct competition. As the trees grow they quickly shade the other species, and I am now mowing beneath them as some grass has returned. There seems to be no juglone intolerance in these broad-leaved species, as I see no major species-difference where they grow between fields with trees or without.